On Jun 12, 08 19:11:35 -0500, Karl Berry wrote: > Screen is such a popular and long-standing program, it's especially > important to have it be actively maintained. The last release I see on > ftp.gnu.org is from 2004 :(.
After that date we published updates through openSUSE. > One immediate issue is that, as a GNU package, the license should be > upgraded to "GPLv3 or later". If you don't want to make a new release > with technical changes now (which would be ideal), then could one of you > prepare a release simply changing all the 2's to 3's in the license > notices and changing the COPYING file to the new text? I'd like to ask the copyright owner *not* to kick GPLv2. Changing all the 2's into 3's is easier done, than undone. One downside that I am aware of, is, that it creates an undesired incompatibility with existing non-GNU code that remains GPLv2. Portions of screen code where reused in the past in other projects, one example was irsii, if I recall correctly; another one should be readline. I believe GPLv2 wasn't such a bad license that its compatibility should be abandoned. We've all enjoyed the freedom of copy/paste-ing GPL code across projects, so I'd like to show my gratitude by allowing others exactly the same. Is this a plausible point of view? thanks, Jw. PS: The only other issue I have with GPLv3 is its size. :-) -- o \ Juergen Weigert unix-software __/ _=======.=======_ <V> | [EMAIL PROTECTED] creator __/ _---|____________\/ \ | 0179/2069677 __/ (____/ /\ (/) | ____________________________/ _/ \_ vim:set sw=2 wm=8